No Kings protest live updates: Bernie Sanders to headline rally in Washington DC | Trump administration

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No Kings protest live updates: Bernie Sanders to headline rally in Washington DC | Trump administration

What to know about the anti-Trump No Kings protests

Rachel Leingang

Millions are expected to show out for protests on Saturday at more than 2,500 locations across America, from small towns to large cities, to speak against the Trump administration.

No Kings, the coalition behind a mass demonstration in June, is again calling people to the streets to send the simple message that Donald Trump is not a king, pushing back against what they see as increasing authoritarianism.

Several US cities now have a militarised presence on the ground, most against the will of local leaders. Trump has promised to crack down on dissent as part of an ongoing retribution campaign. Still, organisers say they expect to see one of the largest, if not the largest, single day of protest in US history.

What are the No Kings protests?

A coalition of left-leaning groups is again leading a day of mass demonstrations across the US to protest against the Trump administration. The coalition spearheaded a previous No Kings protest day in June, drawing millions to the streets to speak out against the president on the same day Trump held a military parade in Washington.

The protests are called No Kings to underscore that America does not have kinds of absolute rulers, a ding against Trump’s increasing authoritarianism.

“‘NO KINGS’ is more than just a slogan; it is the foundation our nation was built upon,” a website for the protests, nokings.org, says. “Born in the streets, shouted by millions, carried on posters and chants, it echoes from city blocks to rural town squares, uniting people across this country to fight dictatorship together.”

Where are they happening?

Organisers say there are more than 2,500 protests planned across the country, in the largest cities and in small towns, and in all 50 states. It is part of a distributed model where people protest in their own communities rather than travelling to large urban hubs to show that discontent with Trump exists in all corners of the US.

For the 18 October day of action, organisers have identified several anchor cities: Washington DC; San Francisco; San Diego; Atlanta; New York City; Houston, Texas; Honolulu; Boston; Kansas City, Missouri; Bozeman, Montana; Chicago and New Orleans.

The protests start at different times depending on location. The No Kings website has a map with details for each location.

Read more about who organised the protests, why organisers are asking protesters to wear yellow, what Trump has said about them and more in our Q&A here:

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Updated at 07.24 EDT

Key events

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People are gathering in Times Square in New York City by the thousands for “No Kings” day as protests kick off on the east coast.

People gather at Times Square during a “No Kings” national day of protest in New York on October 18, 2025. Photograph: Timothy A Clary/AFP/Getty ImagesPeople participate in a “No Kings” national day of protest in New York on October 18, 2025. Photograph: Timothy A Clary/AFP/Getty ImagesPeople participate in a “No Kings” national day of protest in New York on October 18, 2025. Photograph: Timothy A Clary/AFP/Getty ImagesPeople attend a “No Kings” protest against U.S. President Donald Trump’s policies, in Times Square in New York City, US, October 18, 2025. Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/ReutersShare

Vermont senator Bernie Sanders will headline the Washington DC No Kings rally near the US Capitol building in what is anticipated to be the largest grassroots mobilization since Trump returned to office.

“I am looking forward to joining millions of Americans across the country at a ‘No Kings’ rally tomorrow. I’ll be speaking here in Washington, DC. I hope to see you there,” Sanders wrote on social media.

In an accompanying video, he added: “People fought and died throughout the history of this country to preserve our democracy. We’re not going to let Trump or anybody else take it away.”

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Updated at 11.06 EDT

Democratic officials across the US have posted in support of the No Kings protests.

The Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer, wrote on Saturday morning in a social media post: “Do not let Donald Trump and Republicans intimidate you into silence. That’s what they want to do. They’re afraid of the truth. Speak out, use your voice, and exercise your right to free speech.”

California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, wrote: “I urge our nation to use this weekend’s No Kings marches as a declaration of independence against the tyranny and lawlessness currently running this country. Use your voice. ACT PEACEFULLY. Protect yourself and your community. THERE ARE NO KINGS IN THE UNITED STATES.”

Former vice-president Kamala Harris said in a video posted to social media: “In our country, the power is with the people, and tomorrow I encourage everyone to get out there in peaceful protest of what is happening in our country and express our voice around the country we believe in.”

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Updated at 11.09 EDT

Judith Levine

“They have a ‘Hate America’ rally that’s scheduled for October 18 on the National Mall,” the House speaker, Mike Johnson, said on Fox News on Friday. “It’s all the pro-Hamas wing and, you know, the antifa people. They’re all coming out.”

The Republican Minnesota congressman Tom Emmer said the party’s “terrorist wing” was holding the “Hate America” rally. “Democrats want to keep the government shut down to show all those people that are going to come here and express their hatred towards this country that they’re fighting President Trump,” said the House majority leader, Steve Scalise. The transportation secretary, Sean Duffy, embellished the story on Fox, referring to the demonstrations’ “paid protesters” and adding: “It begs the question who’s funding it.”

These people are, of course, slandering the second round of No Kings marches, following those on 14 June, which dwarfed Trump’s pitiful birthday party military parade. This time the events – more than 2,500 of them, according to organizers, planned for every state – promise to be even larger.

Trump’s allies are trying to overwrite the patriotic, historically resonant words “No Kings” with insinuations of treasonous violence.

Everyone participating in the protests must prove them wrong. Nonviolence, both rigorously disciplined and open-hearted, must define 18 October.

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Trump tells Fox News: ‘I’m not a king’

Ramon Antonio Vargas

Donald Trump told Fox News, “I’m not a king,” as millions across the US were expected to march against his second presidency, uniting behind a message that the nation should halt its slide toward authoritarianism — and that kings should not rule the country.

“A king! This is not an act,” Trump said in a preview clip of an interview scheduled for the upcoming edition of Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures. “You know – they’re referring to me as a king. ‘I’m not a king.”

Saturday’s planned No Kings demonstrations build on massive protests in June. Events are scheduled in more than 2,700 locations, ranging from small towns to large cities, among them some who have sued the Trump administrations over its actions targeting them.

Allies of Trump have derisively referred to the demonstrations as “Hate America” events. The gatherings were planned as Trump has sent in federal troops in certain cities to either support immigration agents seeking to deport as many people as possible or to ostensibly fight crime, even though at least some of those communities had been reporting steep reductions in violence.

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No Kings solidarity protests pop up across Europe

Ahead of the huge No Kings protests expected across all 50 states of the US on Saturday, several protests in solidarity have popped up across Europe.

In Berlin, Germany:

Photograph: Christian Mang/Reuters

In Madrid, Spain:

Photograph: Violeta Santos Moura/Reuters

In Rome, Italy:

Photograph: Marco Di Gianvito/ZUMA Press Wire/ShutterstockShare

Updated at 09.55 EDT

Some Republican states activate National Guard ahead of No Kings protests

Republican governors in several US states have placed National Guard troops on standby in preparation for a nationwide protest to oppose Donald Trump and his policies.

Governors in Texas and Virginia have activated their state’s National Guard troops, although it is unclear how visible the military presence will be.

Donald Trump has cracked down on US cities, attempting to send in federal troops and adding more immigration agents. He is seeking to criminalize dissent, going after left-leaning organizations that he claims are supporting terrorism or political violence. Cities have largely fought back, suing to prevent national guard infusions, and residents have taken to the streets to speak out against the militarization of their communities.

Trump’s allies have sought to cast the No Kings protests as anti-American and led by antifa, the decentralized anti-fascist movement, while also claiming that the protests are prolonging the government shutdown.

Greg Abbott, the governor of Texas, has said he will send the state’s national guard to Austin, the state’s capital, in advance of the protests. He said the troops would be needed due to the “planned antifa-linked demonstration”.

Democrats denounced the move, including the state’s top Democrat Gene Wu, who argued: “Sending armed soldiers to suppress peaceful protests is what kings and dictators do – and Greg Abbott just proved he’s one of them.”

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Michael Sainato

Recovery from a recent surgery for colon cancer will not stop James Phipps, 75, from attending Saturday’s No Kings demonstration in Chicago, Illinois. “I have a burning desire to be a part of the protest.” he said, “because that’s all I’ve done all my life.”

Phipps, born in Marks, Mississippi, was involved in the civil rights movement in the 1960s from the age of 13, when he was part of racially integrating his local high school and organising with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. At 15, he became involved in the Mississippi Freedom Labor Union (MFLU), which organised sharecroppers for better wages.

At the time, the MFLU was organising cotton pickers. “They were paid 30 cents an hour, working in the hot sun, 10 hours a day, which was $3, two and half cents per pound of cotton,” said Phipps. “It broke their necks, backs, pelvis and knees.”

“They had no medical care,” he added. “That’s one of the key things in my mind right now.”

Read more about how some of the largest labour unions in the US are involved in organising the No Kings protests, with more than 2,600 demonstrations planned across all 50 states:

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Organisers say there are more than 2,500 protests planned across the country. Take a look at where they are expected to take place:

No Kings protest locations across the US No Kings protest locations across the US

The protests start at different times depending on location. The No Kings website has details for each location.

Share

What to know about the anti-Trump No Kings protests

Rachel Leingang

Millions are expected to show out for protests on Saturday at more than 2,500 locations across America, from small towns to large cities, to speak against the Trump administration.

No Kings, the coalition behind a mass demonstration in June, is again calling people to the streets to send the simple message that Donald Trump is not a king, pushing back against what they see as increasing authoritarianism.

Several US cities now have a militarised presence on the ground, most against the will of local leaders. Trump has promised to crack down on dissent as part of an ongoing retribution campaign. Still, organisers say they expect to see one of the largest, if not the largest, single day of protest in US history.

What are the No Kings protests?

A coalition of left-leaning groups is again leading a day of mass demonstrations across the US to protest against the Trump administration. The coalition spearheaded a previous No Kings protest day in June, drawing millions to the streets to speak out against the president on the same day Trump held a military parade in Washington.

The protests are called No Kings to underscore that America does not have kinds of absolute rulers, a ding against Trump’s increasing authoritarianism.

“‘NO KINGS’ is more than just a slogan; it is the foundation our nation was built upon,” a website for the protests, nokings.org, says. “Born in the streets, shouted by millions, carried on posters and chants, it echoes from city blocks to rural town squares, uniting people across this country to fight dictatorship together.”

Where are they happening?

Organisers say there are more than 2,500 protests planned across the country, in the largest cities and in small towns, and in all 50 states. It is part of a distributed model where people protest in their own communities rather than travelling to large urban hubs to show that discontent with Trump exists in all corners of the US.

For the 18 October day of action, organisers have identified several anchor cities: Washington DC; San Francisco; San Diego; Atlanta; New York City; Houston, Texas; Honolulu; Boston; Kansas City, Missouri; Bozeman, Montana; Chicago and New Orleans.

The protests start at different times depending on location. The No Kings website has a map with details for each location.

Read more about who organised the protests, why organisers are asking protesters to wear yellow, what Trump has said about them and more in our Q&A here:

Share

Updated at 07.24 EDT

Rachel Leingang

Donald Trump has promised to crack down on dissent and sent troops into US cities. His allies are claiming antifa, the decentralized antifascist movement, is behind plans to protest. He’s looking for any pretext to go after his opponents.

Still, this Saturday, even in cities with troops on the ground, millions of people are expected to march against the president as part of a second “No Kings” protest. The last No Kings protest in June drew several million people across more than 2,000 locations. This time, more than 2,500 cities and towns nationwide are hosting protests.

Read more about the preparation’s for Saturday’s protests here:

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Opening summary

Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s coverage of the protests due to take place across the country on Saturday, dubbed ‘No Kings’ in protest at the Trump administration.

Leaders of the movement estimated during a press conference on Thursday that there will be more than 2,500 demonstrations throughout the US. “We do not expect there to be any need for the National Guard to be deployed, but if the Trump administration attempts to do that as a way to intimidate peaceful protests, we are prepared for that,” they added.

Leaders of the coalition also said that they don’t anticipate anything other than a peaceful protest, and don’t currently have any information that would suggest any outside agitator groups are planning to disrupt the coordinated demonstrations.

Millions of people turned out for similar protests on Saturday 14 June as Donald Trump held a military parade in the streets of Washington DC.

The protests took place at about 2,100 sites nationwide, from big cities to small towns. A coalition of more than 100 groups joined together to plan the protests, which are committed to a principle of nonviolence.

No Kings organizers estimated the day’s events drew millions of people, in all 50 states and to some cities abroad. These included more than 200,000 in New York and over 100,000 in Philadelphia, plus some small towns with sizable crowds for their populations, including the town of Pentwater, Michigan, which saw 400 people join the protest in their 800-person town, the No Kings coalition said.

The protests were largely peaceful, though some – in Los Angeles and Portland – were later deemed unlawful assembly by law enforcement and met with teargas.

The tenor of the day was also marked by political violence. There were two early morning shootings of two Democratic lawmakers in Minnesota, one of whom was killed along with her husband, in what local officials called a politically motivated attack. The state’s police and governor cautioned people to not attend demonstrations across the state “out of an abundance of caution”.

Earlier this week, Robert De Niro urged Americans to “stand up and be counted” in the protests, characterising Trump as an aspiring tyrant who aims to end American democracy.

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